Guest guest Posted March 18, 2005 Report Share Posted March 18, 2005 > In a message dated 3/18/2005 1:02:27 PM Eastern Standard Time, > emugirls@y... writes: > > > any chance you know exactly " which studies " , or be able to quote them? > > Try the following link. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/bv.fcgi?rid=endocrin.section.33 Particuarilly the bottom paragraph explains a little more. Your doc will probably notice that this is a text book used to teach doctors endocrinology, so its pretty factual. The problem you are going to run into is 1) that this is strictly theoretical; 2) like it says in the paragraph if it were true in all cases small deceases in the hormone would not theoretically lead to symptoms.....this would count on #3; 3) is thyroid hormone self regulating itself by producing its own receptors, see below for a little more on this. I was looking to give you the names of the gene that actaully produce the thyroid hormone receptors but I cannot find them, sorry, I do know that the alpha receptors are produced from a gene on chromosome 17 and the beta receptors are produced from a gene on chromosome 3, if you get the chance ask your doc if he knows if they are self regulating....it will probably show him that you are looking seriously into this and also I don't have the answer and would like it. LOL To explain #3 a little more......the thyroid recptors, the ones that have been pretty thourghly studied, work in two ways transcription and repression or silenceing of a gene. Transcription means that the receptor is actually on the membrane of the cell nucleus where it will bind to the hormone and then take a ride all the way to center of the neclues where it will ultimately bind to your actual DNA. It picks up a couple other molecules on the way so that it can do this but thats not important right now. Once it binds to the DNA what it does is unravel it and slides down a gene where it will duplicate that gene and sends out what they call mRNA back out to the the fluid of the cell. Once the mRNA is back out in the cell ribosome, basically a sugar molecule, will do the same thing to the mRNA that the receptor did to your DNA....unravels it and makes a protein strand. This protein strands are things like serotonin, growth hormone etc etc etc....... So far they have found 198 different genes that thyroid hormone express, I beleieve that it is more than that but that was one papaer I read. What I meant by self regualting is that I don't know if one of the protein strands they put out is the actual thyroid hormone receptor itself. I also said that they work by repression, basically they can tell a cell to stop making protein strands. The receptor that does this is primarily the beta 2 receptor, if I remember correctly. They are most abundant in the hypothalimus, so they are probably the ones that tell your body to stop putting out TSH. Theyu are also pretty abundant in the liver and kidneys but they do not know the most likely use for them in those organs yet. Hope this helps. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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